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Perspective Shift

You read this story from where you sit.
Want to read it from somewhere else?

We'll re-present the same story as a thoughtful proponent of the global statesman frame would. Not to convince you. To let you actually meet the argument.

Choose a vantage
Retold from the other vantage
Steelman · slot A
The middle-power coalition case
A G7 finance official would argue —
What Carney named at Davos is real: the rules-based order has ruptured, and someone has to organize the willing before the vacuum hardens. He brings something almost no other Western leader has right now — two central bank governorships, fluency with the institutions that move capital, and a mandate fresh enough to spend political capital abroad. That's why Lagarde calls him a rock star and why his trips to Beijing, Delhi and the Gulf matter: he's wiring Canada into a coalition of middle powers that can hedge against both Washington and great-power rivalry. Canadians sensing that their prime minister is the one others wish they had isn't vanity — it's leverage. In a fractured order, a credible convener is worth more than a bigger GDP.

If this read like a fair rendering of the argument — even when you disagree — it's doing its job. Steelmen aren't aimed at persuading you; they're aimed at what the other side actually believes when they're thinking clearly.